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Modesto Common Core
ReadingOctober 11, 2012
Today’s agendaFocus for the day – Reading AM Session
1. Understanding Rigor/Relevance Framework
2. Exploring the Reading strand in the CCSS
3. Practice with Text Complexity4. Text Based Questions.
Today’s agenda
• PM Session– Create a literacy unit using the R/R
Framework• Incorporate text you identified in the Text
Complexity exercise• Incorporate Text based Questions• Design a Quad D assessment
• January – Reflection/sharing
Six Shifts in ELA/Literacy • Balancing Informational and
Literary Text• Building Knowledge in the
Disciplines • Staircase of Complexity • Text-Based Answers • Writing From Sources • Academic Vocabulary 4
Smarter Reading Targets
CCSS ELA & Literacy Strand
• Foundational Skills K-5– Will be measured by teachers
• K-2 intensively• 3-5 Systematically at grade levels• Assessmentts
– Formative – Diagnostis– Modify instruction and remidiation
Reading Standards for LiteratureK-5 and 6-12
• Anchor standard 1 governs standards 2-9
• Focuses and use evidence to support analyses, claims conclusions, and inferences about text
• Standard 1 underlies each Assessment Target
Reading Standard 1
• Read closely to determine what the text says explicitly and to make logical inferences from it; cite specific textual evidence when writing or speaking to support conclusions drawn from the text.
What is a claim?
“Claims” are the broad statements of the assessment system’s learning outcomes, each of which requires evidence that articulates the types of data/observations that will support interpretations of competence towards achievement of the claims
The Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium English Language Arts Content Specifications
• Claim 1: Students can read closely and analytically to comprehend a range of increasingly complex literary and informational texts. Reading, literary and informational text.
• Claim 2: Students can produce effective and well grounded writing for a range of purpose and audiences.
• Claim 3: Students can employ effective speaking and listening skills for a range of purposes and audiences.
• Claim 4: Students can engage in research/inquiry to investigate topics, and to analyze, integrate, and present information.
Assessment Targets (evidence)
• Describe the expectations of what will be assessed by the items and tasks within each claim.
• Prioritized content
• Shows how one or more of the Common Core State Standards (or parts of standards) address the target
Claim 1
• Students can read closely and analytically to comprehend a range of increasingly complex literary and informational texts.
1. Targets 1–7 correspond with literary texts
2. Targets 8–14 correspond with informational texts
3. The assessment targets incorporate the content clusters from the Common Core State Standards
Assessment targets for Literacy
1.Key Details - DOK 1,22. Central Ideas – DOK 23. Word Meaning – DOK 1,24. Reasoning and Evaluation – DOK 3,45.Analysis within or across texts – DOK 3,46.Text stimulus and features – DOK 3,47.Language Use – DOK 2,3
Assessment Targets for Informational Text
8. Key details – DOK 1,29. Central Ideas – DOK 210.Word Meaning – DOK 1,211.Reasoning and Evaluation – DOK 3,412.Analysis within or across texts – DOK 2.3 Elem; 3,4 MS
and HS13.Text Structures and Features – DOK 2 Elem, 3,4 MS
and HS14.Language Use – DOK 2,3 Elem; 3 MS and HS
Shift 1
Balancing Literature and Informational
Text
19
Literature Literature Literature Informational Text
Stories Drama Poetry Literary Nonfiction and Historical, Scientific, and Technical Texts
Includes children’s adventure stories, folktales, legends, fables, fantasy, realistic fiction, and myth
Includes staged dialogue and brief familiar scenes
Includes nursery rhymes and the subgenres of the narrative poem, limerick, and free verse poem
Includes biographies and autobiographies; books about history, social studies, science, and the arts; technical texts, including directions, forms, and information displayed in graphs, charts, or maps; and digital sources on a range of topics
Literary/Informational Text
Grade Literary Informational
4 50% 50%
8 45% 55%
12 30% 70%
Reading Framework for NAEP 2009
Shift #2
Building Knowledge in the
Disciplines
How is reading history/social studies different from other types of reading?
• History is interpretive.• History is an argument in favor of a
particular narrative.• Who the author is matters. (sourcing)• The author’s purpose matters. (bias
and perspective)• A single text is problematic.
(corroboration)
How is reading science and technical reading different from other types of reading?
• Focus is on claims and counter claims• Precise details, complex details and
processes• Analyze results by comparing• Determining what question is being
raised• Navigate text, graphs, tables, charts• Evaluate basis for claims
Shift #3
Staircase of Txt Complexity
25
Overview of Text Complexity
Reading Standards include over exemplar texts (stories and literature, poetry, and informational texts) that illustrate appropriate level of complexity by grade
Text complexity is defined by:
Qua
litat
ive
1. Qualitative measures – levels of meaning, structure, language conventionality and clarity, and knowledge demands Q
uantitative
2. Quantitative measures – readability and other scores of text complexity
Reader and Task
3. Reader and Task – background knowledge of reader, motivation, interests, and complexity generated by tasks assigned
Staircasing Texts
Text at Low End of Grade Band
Text Between Low End and Middle of
Grade Band
Text Near Middle of Grade Band
Text Between Middle and High End of Grade Band
Text at High End of Grade Band
Beginning of Year
End of Year
Toward CCR
27
Step 1: Qualitative Measures
Measures such as:• Levels of meaning• Levels of purpose• Structure• Organization• Language conventionality• Language clarity• Prior knowledge demands
28
Measures such as:• Word length• Word frequency• Word difficulty• Sentence length• Text length• Text cohesion
Step 2: Quantitative Measures
Text Complexity Grade Bands and Associated Lexile Ranges
Text Complexity Grade Band in the
Standards
Old Lexile Ranges Lexile Ranges Aligned to CCR
expectations
K-1 N/A N/A
2-3 450-725 450-790
4-5 645-845 770-980
6-8 860-1010 955-1155
9-10 960-1115 1080-1305
11-CCR 1070-1220 1215-1355
Lexile Analyzerhttp://www.lexile.com/analyzer/
32
Step 3: Reader and Task
Considerations such as:• Motivation• Knowledge and experience• Purpose for reading• Complexity of task assigned
regarding text• Complexity of questions asked
regarding text
Step 4: Recommended Placement
33
Step 4: Recommended Placement
After reflecting upon all three legs of the text complexity model we can make a final recommendation of placement within a text and begin to document our thinking for future reference.
Shift #4
Text Based Answers
High-quality, Text-dependent Questions & Tasks
• “Among the highest priorities of the Common Core Standards is that students can read closely and gain knowledge from texts.”
• “More questions that can be answered only with reference to the text.”
• “Sequences of questions should elicit a sustained discussion.”
• Tasks must “require the use of more textual evidence.”
Shift #5
Writing from Sources
NAEP 2011 Writing Framework
Grade To Persuade To Explain To Convey Experience
4 30% 35% 35%
8 35% 35% 30%
12 40% 40% 20%
Writing and Research the Analyzes and Deploys Evidence
• Draw evidence from texts to support and develop:• Analysis• Reflection• Research
• Increase opportunities to write in response to sources• Extensive practice with short, focused research projects
• “typically taking a week and occurring—at a minimum—quarterly”
• Increase focus on argumentation and informative writing, less narrative writing
Shift #6
Academic Vocabulary
Language Progressive Skills
40
Tier I - words of everyday speech
Tier II - general academic words, typically found in text, ways to
communicate simple ideas
Tier III - domain-specific words (informational text)
Close ReadingStudents will:1.engage with a text of sufficient
complexity • examine its meaning thoroughly and
methodically• read and reread deliberately.• understand the central ideas and key
supporting details.•
Close Reading• reflect on the meanings of individual
words and sentences; • understand the order in which
sentences unfold; and the• development of ideas over the
course of the text,• gather observations about a text • more sensitive to inconsistencies,
ambiguities, and poor reasoning in texts.
•
Close Reading
• Students can:• Make comparisons and synthesize
ideas• Use meaning developed through the
analysis of words, phrases, sentences and paragraph to make connections among ideas across multiple text
Selecting texts
• Short text of sufficient complexity– Poems, short stories, magazine articles
• Extended texts– Book-length information text, magazine
with a series of related articles or stories or a website with multiple related pages of grade-level text
Cite evidence and analyze content
• Students learn to draw sufficient evidence from a range of different types of complex text
Understand and apply vocabulary
• Academic vocabulary is taught in context
• Helping students make connections• Identify patterns in language• Acquire word meaning through
reading• Build fluency, improve
comprehension
Understand and apply grammar
• Students will gain a strong command of grammar and usage through extensive reading
• Explicit comprehension instruction should not be delayed until students are able to read grade-level text independently.
• Read-alouds and the use of text-based discussions are opportunities to help students learn from complex informational text, especially when students are just learning to read or if students struggle to read informational text independently
(Beck & McKeown, 2001; Snow, Burns, & Griffin, 1998).
• 48
“Reading to learn”
• Students who struggle with reading can successfully handle informational text when instruction includes– explicit teaching of text structure, – procedural facilitators such as think sheets,
prompt cards, and mnemonics, and – the use of teacher modeling and guided feedback
(Gersten & Baker, 2000, 2001; Williams, 2008)
– From K-12 Teachers: Building Comprehension in the Common Core
• 49
Students who struggle
• When discussion followed the read-aloud, students seemed to prefer informational text.
• When no discussion followed the read-aloud, the students preferred narrative text.
• Research also suggests that students are more likely to select informational text for independent reading if their teacher used the informational text in a read-aloud Dreher & Dromsky, 2000; Duke, Bennett-Armistead, &
Roberts, 2003). – From K-12 Teachers: Building Comprehension in the Common Core
• 50
Young children’s preference
• Time spent with informational texts• Books on a wide variety of topics that interest
elementary grade children• Informational texts and stories grouped in a thematic
unit • Graphic organizers• Explicit comprehension strategy instruction• Teachers and students using a core set of questions• .
• 51
Classroom snapshot: You would see
• Teacher and student-initiated questions about the text
• Teacher-facilitated read-aloud and text-based discussions
• Use of before-during-after reading components to discuss the text and apply comprehension strategies
• Students retelling what they learned from an informational text with a partner
• Teachers and students using content language and text-related academic language
• 52
Classroom snapshot: You would hear
Morning Session
Modesto, CA